World Economic Forum Unveils Its Annual Assessment of Breakthrough Innovations
The World Economic Forum has released its fourteenth edition of the Top 10 Emerging Technologies report, co-published with Frontiers in June 2026. This year's selection emphasizes technologies moving from laboratory concepts into practical deployment across energy systems, healthcare, materials science, food production, and cybersecurity. The report highlights innovations selected for their novelty, stage of development, and potential societal and economic impact within the next three to five years.
Experts note that the list reflects a shift toward physical-world applications after years of software-centric advances in artificial intelligence. Many entries address pressing global challenges including climate adaptation, sustainable resource extraction, personalized medicine, and post-quantum security. The technologies are already demonstrating commercial traction in pilot projects and early deployments worldwide.
Key Trends Shaping the 2026 Selection
Three overarching patterns emerge across the ten technologies. First, solutions are becoming highly personalized, tailored to individual patients, specific sites, or unique contexts rather than one-size-fits-all approaches. Second, production and generation are decentralizing, enabling energy, food, and materials to be created closer to the point of use. Third, the innovations deliver greater efficiency and lower environmental footprints compared with conventional methods.
These trends align with broader academic and research priorities in sustainability, precision health, and resilient infrastructure. Universities and research institutions are well positioned to contribute through interdisciplinary programs that combine engineering, biology, computer science, and policy studies.
Everything-to-Grid Energy Systems
Everything-to-grid technology enables two-way electricity flow by mobilizing distributed storage assets such as electric vehicle batteries, home systems, and industrial installations. During periods of high demand and low renewable generation, these assets discharge stored power back into the grid. Pilot programs in California have already demonstrated the approach, with networks of solar-equipped homes supplying tens of megawatts during evening peaks, rivaling the output of traditional peaker plants without associated emissions.
Researchers are examining grid integration challenges, demand-response algorithms, and regulatory frameworks needed for widespread adoption. Academic studies on battery degradation under frequent cycling and optimal dispatch strategies are informing utility planning worldwide.
Direct Lithium Extraction Methods
Direct lithium extraction uses engineered sorbents, membranes, and solvents to pull battery-grade lithium from brine sources in hours rather than the traditional two-year evaporation process. The method reduces water consumption and works with geothermal fluids, oilfield wastewater, and recycled materials, diversifying supply chains beyond concentrated production regions.
Several commercial plants are now operating in Argentina, the United States, and Australia. University-led research is advancing sorbent materials and process optimization, with implications for materials science departments and mining engineering programs.
Passive Radiative Cooling Materials
These advanced coatings and films reflect up to 95 percent of incoming sunlight while emitting thermal radiation through the atmospheric window, cooling surfaces below ambient air temperature without electricity. Applications range from building roofs and walls to power cables, where one UK startup reports a 30 percent increase in transmission capacity.
Energy savings of up to 20 percent have been recorded in retail settings. Building science and materials engineering researchers are studying long-term durability, urban heat island mitigation, and integration with existing infrastructure standards in regions such as California and China.
PFAS Destruction Technologies
Per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances, known as forever chemicals, resist breakdown and have contaminated water supplies globally. Emerging destruction methods apply superheated water, electrical currents, or ultraviolet-driven reactions to sever the strong carbon-fluorine bonds. Commercial-scale facilities in Michigan and field trials achieving 99.99 percent destruction rates demonstrate progress.
Environmental engineering and chemistry programs are expanding research into scalable, cost-effective destruction processes and monitoring techniques for contaminated sites.
Precision Fermentation for Sustainable Production
Precision fermentation engineers microbes such as yeast and bacteria to produce proteins, enzymes, and other compounds identical to those from traditional sources. The approach already supports commercial production of animal-free whey and egg proteins, with expanding applications in pharmaceuticals, cosmetics, and chemicals.
Biotechnology and synthetic biology laboratories are exploring new host organisms, metabolic pathways, and downstream processing improvements that could further reduce costs and environmental impacts.
Exosome-Based Drug Delivery Platforms
Exosomes, natural cellular messengers, can be loaded with therapeutics to overcome barriers that limit synthetic delivery systems. Early clinical results in pancreatic cancer and potential applications in neurological disorders such as Alzheimer's show promise for targeted, less toxic treatments.
Biomedical research centers are investigating exosome engineering, manufacturing scale-up, and regulatory pathways for these next-generation delivery vehicles.
Personalized mRNA Cancer Vaccines
These vaccines are custom-designed after sequencing a patient's tumor to target unique mutations. Clinical data from melanoma trials indicate substantial reductions in recurrence risk when combined with immunotherapy. The technology builds on mRNA platforms proven during the pandemic and is advancing through additional oncology indications.
Medical schools and cancer research institutes are developing curricula and clinical trial infrastructure to support personalized vaccine development and delivery.
Quantum Simulation in Drug Discovery
Quantum computers can model molecular interactions at the atomic level with accuracy unattainable by classical systems. Collaborations such as the IBM-Moderna work on protein folding and mRNA interactions illustrate early applications that could shorten development timelines and improve success rates for complex targets.
Quantum information science programs at universities are partnering with pharmaceutical researchers to build hybrid classical-quantum workflows and train the next generation of specialists.
AI World Models for Physical Reasoning
World models enable artificial intelligence systems to build internal representations of physical dynamics from multimodal data. This capability supports more robust robotics, climate modeling, and autonomous systems that generalize beyond training examples. Platforms such as NVIDIA Cosmos demonstrate training on vast physical-world datasets.
Computer science and robotics departments are integrating world-model research into curricula and exploring applications in manufacturing, transportation, and environmental monitoring.
Lattice-Based Cryptography for Post-Quantum Security
Lattice-based methods provide encryption resistant to both classical and future quantum attacks by embedding data in complex mathematical structures with added noise. The approach already protects Apple's iMessage and is planned for broader Android deployment.
Cryptography and cybersecurity research groups are evaluating implementation performance, standardization efforts, and migration strategies for critical infrastructure and academic networks.
Photo by Google DeepMind on Unsplash
Implications for Academic Research and Higher Education
The report underscores opportunities for universities to lead in translational research, technology transfer, and workforce development. Interdisciplinary centers combining engineering, life sciences, data analytics, and policy are particularly well suited to advance these technologies. Funding agencies and foundations are expected to prioritize projects aligned with the identified areas.
PhD programs and postdoctoral training in related fields may see increased demand as industry partnerships expand. Administrators are reviewing curriculum updates to prepare graduates for roles in emerging technology sectors.
Future Outlook and Scaling Considerations
While many technologies have reached commercial pilots, challenges remain in regulatory approval, infrastructure investment, public acceptance, and equitable access. The report's transformation maps and calls to action provide frameworks for stakeholders to accelerate responsible deployment.
Academic institutions can contribute through independent evaluation, ethical analysis, and capacity-building initiatives that support global adoption while addressing potential risks.
